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CompactList

Build Status

CompactList implements the List<Long> interface, but internally it uses a tree of variable word-width segments to improve performance and memory usage compared to an ArrayList.

Similar primitive container implementations can be found elsewhere, notably:

Maven

This project is published to Maven Central via Sonatype OSSRH

<dependency>
  <groupId>net.kothar</groupId>
  <artifactId>compactlist</artifactId>
  <version>0.4.2</version>
</dependency>

Performance

Performance of CompactList tends to be worse than ArrayList for small lists, but gains an advantage for random inserts as list size increases. This is mainly due to the tree structure which limits the amount of memory that needs to be copied when elements are inserted or removed, or the allocated backing array is grown during an append.

The implementation currently splits segments at 2^16 elements, which is where performance gains for insertion start to appear. In the charts below, CompactList beats ArrayList when inserting ~2^17 or more elements.

Benchmarks were run on a 2.2 GHz Intel Core i7 running MacOS 12.0.1 and AdoptOpenJDK 11.0.11

mvn exec:exec will run the benchmarks.

Append

This benchmark appends sequential values to the end of the list.

Total time for sequential append Average operation time for sequential append

Insert

This benchmark inserts sequential values at random locations as the list grows

Total time for sequential insert Average operation time for sequential insert

Remove

This benchmark creates a list of sequential values by appending, then removes elements at random indices until the list is empty.

Total time for random removal Average operation time for random removal

Set

This benchmark creates a list of sequential values by appending, then sets elements at random indices a number of times equal to the size of the list.

Total time for random set Average operation time for random set

Iteration

Memory usage

Memory usage depends on how regular the data is, since more regular data can be stored with fewer bits. As a baseline, non-compacted CompactLists on a 64-bit JVM use roughly one third of the memory of an ArrayList<Long> (8 bytes per value vs 4 byte pointer + 24 byte Long object per value). Memory usage after compaction is close to the underlying storage size for the smallest word width capable of storing the range of values in each segment.

CompactList handles regular data such as repeated or ascending values extremely well.

Storage strategies are implemented for word widths of 64, 32, 16, 8, 4 and 0 (constant value).

Memory usage after append Memory usage after insertion Memory usage after removal Memory usage after set

Compaction strategy

Lists can be compacted manually by calling CompactList.compact().

When compacting, several strategies are attempted to reduce the storage size needed:

Offset will attempt to add an offset to each value, shifting the zero-point to the middle of the range of values stored in the current block.